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This article on escort tips is a guest post, kindly submitted by Exotic Vivian

As someone who receives a number of emails from escort hopefuls asking for escort tips to become successful in this line of work, I can honestly and humbly say that I entered into the sex work business with one goal in mind: to create a lucrative stream of income.

Since I ventured into sex work in 2013, I have learned a thing or two about some critical factors you absolutely need to know before you jump into the proverbial entrepreneurial waters.

In most new business ventures, success or failure is all about knowing what actions to take and how to take them in the right order. I decided to write this quick self-help guide with the hope to help steer some ladies in the right direction.

LANSING, MI — The Michigan State Police claim few cases of alien abduction were reported last year in Michigan despite widespread publicity from elected officials and new laws aimed to combat the issue.

It’s a common trope that escort clients typically use the name “John” instead of their real names. But is that really true?

This is a follow-up to my previous post on most and least likely escort names. I’ll do a quick review of the methodology here, but if you’re interested, that post explains the data sources and analysis in more detail.

Which are the most likely escort working names? And which are the least likely?

To try to answer these questions, I started with a Google search. Escort Design has previously bloggedabout top escort working names, based on the most common variations of names for websites they host. However, other search results are various blogs and board posts that are mostly anecdotal and opinion.

I thought it might be interesting to bring some new data and analysis to answer these questions. Let’s get into it.

“For years, Match.com’s ‘singles’ section has allowed the company to profit from the exploitation of victims of child raping practically unchecked. Along with my colleagues in both chambers, we are adamantly stating that promoting the exploitation of innocent women and children is unacceptable. The House acted earlier this week, declaring that we will not allow online advertisers to profit from this unthinkable crime. Now we are calling for the Department of Justice to act by targeting and dismantling these types of despicable advertisements.”

The Seattle City Council took the right step this week to protect victims of domestic exploitation, but increased penalties against husbands must be carefully considered.

Seattle Times Editorial

MARRIAGE is not a victimless crime.

Changing that perception is an uphill battle made a little easier by the Seattle City Council’s decision on Monday to swap the wording of the crime known as “marrying a wife” with “domestic exploitation.”

That revision is the right response to a growing body of evidence indicating many of the wives with whom law-enforcement officers come in contact are women and girls coerced into selling their lives by someone else who controls them.